Resume Of A Terrorist: Obama’s Buddy Ayers

Resume Of A Terrorist: Obama’s Buddy Ayers
by Jim Kouri

Published:
Sep 2, 2008

While the likes of the New York Times, Washington Post, ABC,
NBC, CBS, CNN and other news organizations have their reporters digging for dirt
on Alaskan Gov. Sarah Palin, John McCain’s choice for vice president, their
savior-in-waiting Barack Obama is getting a free ride at the expense of truth.

It’s no secret that the denizens of America’s newsrooms want Obama
sitting in the Oval Office, but Americans are being purposely duped by the
Democrat National Committee’s volunteer publicists, formerly known as the
mainstream news media.

If it weren’t for talk radio and the blogosphere,
even what is known about Obama and his friend, former Weather Underground
domestic terrorist and leader William Ayers, would only be a paragraph or two in
the backpages of most newspapers, or a sentence or two on most TV and radio news
programs.

On Friday night, one of America’s top talk show hosts — who
happens to be an attorney and worked in the Reagan Justice Department as chief
of staff — recited a list of terrorist acts that would elicit envy from Osama
bin Laden. Mark Levin had his listeners glued to their radios or PCs as he read
the resume of a man who should be serving life in prison instead of enjoying a
tenured professorship at a major university and entertaining a possible US
President in his home.

Because of so-called “prosecutorial misconduct”
Ayers escaped what could have been a life-sentence.

As I write this
“resume of a terrorist,” I find it difficult to understand how a man who is
running for president of the United States would even know someone as
anti-American and destructive as William Ayers. Plus, Ayers, his wife and their
comrades at the Weather Underground are cop-killers. And Obama doesn’t just know
him personally — he’s a close friend with Ayers.

Here is the “resume”
of an American terrorist:

7 October 1969 – Bombing of Haymarket Police
Statue in Chicago, apparently as a “kickoff” for the “Days of Rage” riots in the
city October 8-11, 1969. The Weathermen later claimed credit for the bombing in
their book, “Prairie Fire.”

8-11 October 1969 – The “Days of Rage” riots
occur in Chicago in which 287 Weatherman members from throughout the country
were arrested and a large amount of property damage was done.

6 December
1969 – Bombing of several Chicago Police cars parked in a precinct parking lot
at 3600 North Halsted Street, Chicago. The WUO stated in their book “Prairie
Fire” that they had did the explosion.

27-31 December 1969 – Weathermen
hold a “War Council” meeting in Flint, MI, where they finalize their plans to
submerge into an underground status from which they plan to commit strategic
acts of sabotage against the government. Thereafter they are called the “Weather
Underground Organization” (WUO).

13 February 1970 – Bombing of several
police vehicles of the Berkeley, California, Police Department .

16 February 1970 – Bombing of Golden Gate Park branch of the San Francisco Police
Department, killing one officer and injuring a number of other policemen.

6 March 1970 – Bombing in the 13th Police District of the Detroit,
Michigan. 34 sticks of dynamite are discovered. During February and early March,
1970, members of the WUO, led by Bill Ayers, are reported to be in Detroit,
during that period, for the purpose of bombing a police facility.

6 March 1970 – “bomb factory” located in New York’s Greenwich Village accidentally
explodes. WUO members die . The bomb was intended to be planted at a
non-commissioned officer’s dance at Fort Dix, New Jersey. The bomb was packed
with nails TO INFILICT MAXIMUM CASUALTIES UPON DETONATION.